
2026 Audi RS6: V8 to live on alongside new EV
The 2026 Audi RS6 won't ditch its V8 engine but it will gain a plug-in hybrid (PHEV) system and be sold alongside the electric RS6 e-tron, marking the first time the Audi Sport division has offered both electric and combustion-powered RS6s.
According to Autocar, the next RS6 is expected in European showrooms in 2026 with Australia following shortly after, and Audi has been testing a V8 PHEV powertrain – much like that employed by the rival BMW M5.
The move comes after a previous decision to make the next RS6 full-electric only was reversed after slower than anticipated sales for electric vehicles (EVs) saw the company ditch plans to sell only EVs by 2033.
The strategic rethink also saw Audi confirm it would develop a new line of internal combustion engines to play a role in expanding its lineup of hybrid vehicles.
Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now.
Instead of ditching the electric RS6 e-tron in favour of a hybrid version, however, Audi will offer customers both.
The 2026 RS6 e-tron, like the A6 e-tron it's derived from, will sit on the Volkswagen Group's Premium Platform Electric (PPE) underpinnings, with the 2026 RS6 hybrid using the Premium Platform Combustion (PPC) architecture like the new-generation Audi A6 it's based on.
The ability to produce both is helped by other brands within the Volkswagen Group, including Porsche, continuing to offer internal-combustion-engine hybrids alongside EVs, splitting development costs across more models.
While the RS6 is a rival to the BMW i5 M60 and BMW M5 PHEV, given its similar size and price, the move more closely resembles the decision by BMW's M division to introduce both EV and hybrid models of the next BMW M3 on different platforms.
Further hedging its bets, Audi will offer the RS6 in sedan and wagon body styles – reintroducing the sedan for the first time since 2010 – according to Autocar.
The next RS6 is set to be the most powerful RS6 yet with the hybrid version expected to use a further developed version of the 4.0-litre twin-turbo V8 – used by Porsche and Bentley – which makes 453kW/850Nm in the current RS6.
Teamed with plug-in hybrid tech including an electric motor integrated into the transmission and a lithium-ion battery, power will jump to as much as 575kW/100Nm – the output the powertrain makes in the Porsche Panamera Turbo S E-Hybrid.
This endows the Panamera with a 2.9-second 0-100km/h time and 325km/h top speed.
Those sorts of figures, if achieved in the RS6, would outmuscle the latest G90 BMW M5's performance, which sees 0-100km/h in 3.6 seconds and a 305km/h top speed from its 727kW V8 PHEV.
The RS6 e-tron is expected to build on the current Audi S6 e-tron – due in Australia this year with a 405kW/856Nm dual-motor all-wheel drive powertrain – by some margin and will be offered with the same 94.8kWh battery as the standard A6 e-tron.
Audi's current high-performance EV is the RS e-tron GT performance, which produces 680kW and does the 0-100km/h dash in 2.5 seconds. A source told Autocar, however, that the RS6 e-tron is unlikely to be as powerful though there will be a "solid increase" over the S6 e-tron.
Both petrol-hybrid and EV RS6s will look the part, with pumped-up body work, larger front air intakes as well as large alloy wheels housing high-performance brakes.
More details are expected ahead of the 2026 Audi RS6's official unveiling, expected sometime later this year.
MORE: Everything Audi
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
The 2026 Audi RS6 won't ditch its V8 engine but it will gain a plug-in hybrid (PHEV) system and be sold alongside the electric RS6 e-tron, marking the first time the Audi Sport division has offered both electric and combustion-powered RS6s.
According to Autocar, the next RS6 is expected in European showrooms in 2026 with Australia following shortly after, and Audi has been testing a V8 PHEV powertrain – much like that employed by the rival BMW M5.
The move comes after a previous decision to make the next RS6 full-electric only was reversed after slower than anticipated sales for electric vehicles (EVs) saw the company ditch plans to sell only EVs by 2033.
The strategic rethink also saw Audi confirm it would develop a new line of internal combustion engines to play a role in expanding its lineup of hybrid vehicles.
Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now.
Instead of ditching the electric RS6 e-tron in favour of a hybrid version, however, Audi will offer customers both.
The 2026 RS6 e-tron, like the A6 e-tron it's derived from, will sit on the Volkswagen Group's Premium Platform Electric (PPE) underpinnings, with the 2026 RS6 hybrid using the Premium Platform Combustion (PPC) architecture like the new-generation Audi A6 it's based on.
The ability to produce both is helped by other brands within the Volkswagen Group, including Porsche, continuing to offer internal-combustion-engine hybrids alongside EVs, splitting development costs across more models.
While the RS6 is a rival to the BMW i5 M60 and BMW M5 PHEV, given its similar size and price, the move more closely resembles the decision by BMW's M division to introduce both EV and hybrid models of the next BMW M3 on different platforms.
Further hedging its bets, Audi will offer the RS6 in sedan and wagon body styles – reintroducing the sedan for the first time since 2010 – according to Autocar.
The next RS6 is set to be the most powerful RS6 yet with the hybrid version expected to use a further developed version of the 4.0-litre twin-turbo V8 – used by Porsche and Bentley – which makes 453kW/850Nm in the current RS6.
Teamed with plug-in hybrid tech including an electric motor integrated into the transmission and a lithium-ion battery, power will jump to as much as 575kW/100Nm – the output the powertrain makes in the Porsche Panamera Turbo S E-Hybrid.
This endows the Panamera with a 2.9-second 0-100km/h time and 325km/h top speed.
Those sorts of figures, if achieved in the RS6, would outmuscle the latest G90 BMW M5's performance, which sees 0-100km/h in 3.6 seconds and a 305km/h top speed from its 727kW V8 PHEV.
The RS6 e-tron is expected to build on the current Audi S6 e-tron – due in Australia this year with a 405kW/856Nm dual-motor all-wheel drive powertrain – by some margin and will be offered with the same 94.8kWh battery as the standard A6 e-tron.
Audi's current high-performance EV is the RS e-tron GT performance, which produces 680kW and does the 0-100km/h dash in 2.5 seconds. A source told Autocar, however, that the RS6 e-tron is unlikely to be as powerful though there will be a "solid increase" over the S6 e-tron.
Both petrol-hybrid and EV RS6s will look the part, with pumped-up body work, larger front air intakes as well as large alloy wheels housing high-performance brakes.
More details are expected ahead of the 2026 Audi RS6's official unveiling, expected sometime later this year.
MORE: Everything Audi
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
The 2026 Audi RS6 won't ditch its V8 engine but it will gain a plug-in hybrid (PHEV) system and be sold alongside the electric RS6 e-tron, marking the first time the Audi Sport division has offered both electric and combustion-powered RS6s.
According to Autocar, the next RS6 is expected in European showrooms in 2026 with Australia following shortly after, and Audi has been testing a V8 PHEV powertrain – much like that employed by the rival BMW M5.
The move comes after a previous decision to make the next RS6 full-electric only was reversed after slower than anticipated sales for electric vehicles (EVs) saw the company ditch plans to sell only EVs by 2033.
The strategic rethink also saw Audi confirm it would develop a new line of internal combustion engines to play a role in expanding its lineup of hybrid vehicles.
Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now.
Instead of ditching the electric RS6 e-tron in favour of a hybrid version, however, Audi will offer customers both.
The 2026 RS6 e-tron, like the A6 e-tron it's derived from, will sit on the Volkswagen Group's Premium Platform Electric (PPE) underpinnings, with the 2026 RS6 hybrid using the Premium Platform Combustion (PPC) architecture like the new-generation Audi A6 it's based on.
The ability to produce both is helped by other brands within the Volkswagen Group, including Porsche, continuing to offer internal-combustion-engine hybrids alongside EVs, splitting development costs across more models.
While the RS6 is a rival to the BMW i5 M60 and BMW M5 PHEV, given its similar size and price, the move more closely resembles the decision by BMW's M division to introduce both EV and hybrid models of the next BMW M3 on different platforms.
Further hedging its bets, Audi will offer the RS6 in sedan and wagon body styles – reintroducing the sedan for the first time since 2010 – according to Autocar.
The next RS6 is set to be the most powerful RS6 yet with the hybrid version expected to use a further developed version of the 4.0-litre twin-turbo V8 – used by Porsche and Bentley – which makes 453kW/850Nm in the current RS6.
Teamed with plug-in hybrid tech including an electric motor integrated into the transmission and a lithium-ion battery, power will jump to as much as 575kW/100Nm – the output the powertrain makes in the Porsche Panamera Turbo S E-Hybrid.
This endows the Panamera with a 2.9-second 0-100km/h time and 325km/h top speed.
Those sorts of figures, if achieved in the RS6, would outmuscle the latest G90 BMW M5's performance, which sees 0-100km/h in 3.6 seconds and a 305km/h top speed from its 727kW V8 PHEV.
The RS6 e-tron is expected to build on the current Audi S6 e-tron – due in Australia this year with a 405kW/856Nm dual-motor all-wheel drive powertrain – by some margin and will be offered with the same 94.8kWh battery as the standard A6 e-tron.
Audi's current high-performance EV is the RS e-tron GT performance, which produces 680kW and does the 0-100km/h dash in 2.5 seconds. A source told Autocar, however, that the RS6 e-tron is unlikely to be as powerful though there will be a "solid increase" over the S6 e-tron.
Both petrol-hybrid and EV RS6s will look the part, with pumped-up body work, larger front air intakes as well as large alloy wheels housing high-performance brakes.
More details are expected ahead of the 2026 Audi RS6's official unveiling, expected sometime later this year.
MORE: Everything Audi
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
The 2026 Audi RS6 won't ditch its V8 engine but it will gain a plug-in hybrid (PHEV) system and be sold alongside the electric RS6 e-tron, marking the first time the Audi Sport division has offered both electric and combustion-powered RS6s.
According to Autocar, the next RS6 is expected in European showrooms in 2026 with Australia following shortly after, and Audi has been testing a V8 PHEV powertrain – much like that employed by the rival BMW M5.
The move comes after a previous decision to make the next RS6 full-electric only was reversed after slower than anticipated sales for electric vehicles (EVs) saw the company ditch plans to sell only EVs by 2033.
The strategic rethink also saw Audi confirm it would develop a new line of internal combustion engines to play a role in expanding its lineup of hybrid vehicles.
Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now.
Instead of ditching the electric RS6 e-tron in favour of a hybrid version, however, Audi will offer customers both.
The 2026 RS6 e-tron, like the A6 e-tron it's derived from, will sit on the Volkswagen Group's Premium Platform Electric (PPE) underpinnings, with the 2026 RS6 hybrid using the Premium Platform Combustion (PPC) architecture like the new-generation Audi A6 it's based on.
The ability to produce both is helped by other brands within the Volkswagen Group, including Porsche, continuing to offer internal-combustion-engine hybrids alongside EVs, splitting development costs across more models.
While the RS6 is a rival to the BMW i5 M60 and BMW M5 PHEV, given its similar size and price, the move more closely resembles the decision by BMW's M division to introduce both EV and hybrid models of the next BMW M3 on different platforms.
Further hedging its bets, Audi will offer the RS6 in sedan and wagon body styles – reintroducing the sedan for the first time since 2010 – according to Autocar.
The next RS6 is set to be the most powerful RS6 yet with the hybrid version expected to use a further developed version of the 4.0-litre twin-turbo V8 – used by Porsche and Bentley – which makes 453kW/850Nm in the current RS6.
Teamed with plug-in hybrid tech including an electric motor integrated into the transmission and a lithium-ion battery, power will jump to as much as 575kW/100Nm – the output the powertrain makes in the Porsche Panamera Turbo S E-Hybrid.
This endows the Panamera with a 2.9-second 0-100km/h time and 325km/h top speed.
Those sorts of figures, if achieved in the RS6, would outmuscle the latest G90 BMW M5's performance, which sees 0-100km/h in 3.6 seconds and a 305km/h top speed from its 727kW V8 PHEV.
The RS6 e-tron is expected to build on the current Audi S6 e-tron – due in Australia this year with a 405kW/856Nm dual-motor all-wheel drive powertrain – by some margin and will be offered with the same 94.8kWh battery as the standard A6 e-tron.
Audi's current high-performance EV is the RS e-tron GT performance, which produces 680kW and does the 0-100km/h dash in 2.5 seconds. A source told Autocar, however, that the RS6 e-tron is unlikely to be as powerful though there will be a "solid increase" over the S6 e-tron.
Both petrol-hybrid and EV RS6s will look the part, with pumped-up body work, larger front air intakes as well as large alloy wheels housing high-performance brakes.
More details are expected ahead of the 2026 Audi RS6's official unveiling, expected sometime later this year.
MORE: Everything Audi
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au

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The Australian share market is trading lower as Middle East strive continues and amid Donald Trump's two-week window to decide whether the US will join Israel's conflict with Iran. The S&P/ASX200 fell 56.2 points, or 0.67 per cent, to 8,466.9, as the broader All Ordinaries slipped 53.9 points, or 0.62 per cent, to 8,687.5. The slump came as the Middle East conflict weighed on investor sentiment and as thin trading conditions due to a US bank holiday sent European equities and US futures lower, market analyst Kyle Rodda said. All signs pointed to a weak finish for the ASX this week. "Like last week where hostilities were boiling over, market participants may be reluctant to hold onto risk exposure over the weekend when a historic US strike on Iran nuclear facilities is an uncomfortably high possibility," Mr Rodda said. Only two of 11 local sectors were trading higher by lunchtime, with both energy and IT stocks up 0.2 per cent. Financials weighed heavily on the bourse, down 1.3 per cent and wiping out Thursday's gains as the big four each lost between 1.2 per cent and 2.2 per cent. The slip came as expectations for a Reserve Bank interest rate cut in July fell from 86 per cent to 78 per cent. Likewise, rate-sensitive consumer-facing stocks were the next worst performing sectors, with discretionaries down 0.9 per cent and staples sinking 0.7 per cent. As attacks in Israel and Iran escalated overnight, oil prices spiked almost three per cent to $US77.50 a barrel, their highest level since January, before settling $US75.83 a barrel after Trump's deadline eased fears of an imminent US attack. Woodside was up a modest 0.5 per cent to $25.77 a share by midday. Materials stocks edged 0.1 per cent lower, as iron ore prices edged higher to take some pressure off large cap miners BHP, Rio Tinto and Fortescue. Gold continues to consolidate tightly to trade at around $US3,380 ($A5,125) an ounce. Australian gold miners were mixed, but larger players Northern Star and Newmont edged higher, while Evolution slipped 0.2 per cent days after multiple UBS downgrades indicated the sector's easy gains could be behind it. The Australian dollar is buying 64.76 US cents, up slightly from 64.71 US cents on Thursday at 5pm. The Australian share market is trading lower as Middle East strive continues and amid Donald Trump's two-week window to decide whether the US will join Israel's conflict with Iran. The S&P/ASX200 fell 56.2 points, or 0.67 per cent, to 8,466.9, as the broader All Ordinaries slipped 53.9 points, or 0.62 per cent, to 8,687.5. The slump came as the Middle East conflict weighed on investor sentiment and as thin trading conditions due to a US bank holiday sent European equities and US futures lower, market analyst Kyle Rodda said. All signs pointed to a weak finish for the ASX this week. "Like last week where hostilities were boiling over, market participants may be reluctant to hold onto risk exposure over the weekend when a historic US strike on Iran nuclear facilities is an uncomfortably high possibility," Mr Rodda said. Only two of 11 local sectors were trading higher by lunchtime, with both energy and IT stocks up 0.2 per cent. Financials weighed heavily on the bourse, down 1.3 per cent and wiping out Thursday's gains as the big four each lost between 1.2 per cent and 2.2 per cent. The slip came as expectations for a Reserve Bank interest rate cut in July fell from 86 per cent to 78 per cent. Likewise, rate-sensitive consumer-facing stocks were the next worst performing sectors, with discretionaries down 0.9 per cent and staples sinking 0.7 per cent. As attacks in Israel and Iran escalated overnight, oil prices spiked almost three per cent to $US77.50 a barrel, their highest level since January, before settling $US75.83 a barrel after Trump's deadline eased fears of an imminent US attack. Woodside was up a modest 0.5 per cent to $25.77 a share by midday. Materials stocks edged 0.1 per cent lower, as iron ore prices edged higher to take some pressure off large cap miners BHP, Rio Tinto and Fortescue. Gold continues to consolidate tightly to trade at around $US3,380 ($A5,125) an ounce. Australian gold miners were mixed, but larger players Northern Star and Newmont edged higher, while Evolution slipped 0.2 per cent days after multiple UBS downgrades indicated the sector's easy gains could be behind it. The Australian dollar is buying 64.76 US cents, up slightly from 64.71 US cents on Thursday at 5pm.